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Skip to content THE SOURCE Close TopicsTopics Arts & Culture Business & Entrepreneurship Campus & Community Humanities & Society Medicine & Health Science & Technology SchoolsSchools Arts & Sciences Brown School McKelvey School of Engineering Olin Business School Sam Fox School of Design & Visual Arts School of Continuing & Professional Studies School of Law School of Medicine PublicationsPublications Newsroom The Record Washington Magazine Search Menu Search for: Search Close NEWSROOM Sections Find an Expert Media Resources Newsroom Stories Perspectives WashU Experts WashU in the News WashU’s College Prep Program welcomes new cohort of high school students St. Louis Region WashU’s College Prep Program welcomes new cohort of high school students Washington University in St. Louis has announced the 11th cohort of the College Prep Program, a free multi-year program that prepares first-generation, limited-income students for college. This summer, the new cohort of 37 rising high school sophomores will engage in two weeks of on-campus academic and social programming. May 24, 2024 WashU in the News NFL faces ‘Sunday Ticket’ lawsuit: Here’s what’s at stake for the league June 18, 2024 CNBC Transcript: Ezra Klein Interviews Yanna Krupnikov June 18, 2024 The New York Times The brain has a waste removal system and scientists are figuring out how it works June 18, 2024 National Public Radio Organizational Behavior Reframing voting as ‘duty to others’ key to increasing engagement, turnout June 20, 2024 Law Ten Commandments display probably not legal June 20, 2024 Mental Health Social workers key to psychedelic-assisted therapies June 20, 2024 Medicine Modifying homes for stroke survivors saves lives, extends independence June 19, 2024 Politics Book explores consequences of political conversations June 19, 2024 Neuroscience & Memory New technology allows researchers to precisely, flexibly modulate brain June 18, 2024 Medicine Repurposed drug may help stabilize vision in rare disease June 17, 2024 Art & Design The next generation of design June 14, 2024 Medicine ADHD meds may help pregnant patients control opioid use disorder June 13, 2024 Read all Newsroom stories For the media View our media resources, contacts and policies From the expertsRead all expert stories WashU Experts Tremor a reminder that East Coast, Midwest earthquake threat is real April 5, 2024 Douglas A. WiensRobert S. Brookings Distinguished Professor of Earth, Environmental, and Planetary Science​s, Arts & Sciences WashU Experts How Key Bridge collapse could impact U.S. supply chains immediately, long-term March 26, 2024 Panos KouvelisEmerson Distinguished Professor of Supply Chain, Operations and Technology, Olin Business School Find an expert Search Experts by Name or ExpertiseSearch ExpertsBrowse by expertiseSee all experts PerspectivesRead more Perspectives ‘Finding religion in the Stanley Cup finals’ Cody Musselman, a postdoctoral researcher at the John C. Danforth Center on Religion and Politics, co-writes an article amid the NHL playoffs about how hockey and oil take on almost religious significance in Canada. June 21, 2024 The Conversation 3 Ways to Support Employees with Bipolar Disorder When their condition is well managed, employees diagnosed with bipolar disorder are likely to bring unique talents and perspectives to an organization, writes Hillary Anger Elfenbein. June 20, 2024 Harvard Business Review ‘Loyal to the Oil’: Finding religion in the Stanley Cup finals Sports are thrilling because sometimes talent, team chemistry and the home-field advantage still lose to a stroke of good luck. Oil culture pairs the idea of divine favor with an insistence on rough-and-tumble endurance, similar to hockey, writes Casey Musselman, postdoctoral research associate June 19, 2024 The Conversation Videos WashU balloon goes over big For the first time, WashU sponsored a hot air balloon in the Great Forest Park Balloon Race, an annual hot air balloon festival held in Forest Park. “Time Traveler” was among the dozens of entrants that delighted the STL community Sept. 15-16, 2023. Read more View all videos BookshelfBrowse books Politics Book explores consequences of political conversations In her new book, political scientist Taylor Carlson, in Arts & Sciences, explores how political information changes as it flows from the news media to person to person. Her research shows that socially transmitted information becomes sparse, biased, less accurate and mobilizing — fueling a “distorted democracy.” June 19, 2024 Published In Newsroom Stories Faculty Books Through the Grapevine Socially Transmitted Information and Distorted Democracy By Taylor N. Carlson Extreme Overvalued Beliefs Clinical and Forensic Psychiatric Dimensions By Tahir Rahman, MD and Jeffrey Abugel God Bless the Child By Anne Shaw Heinrich Critical Theories of Anti-Semitism By Jonathan Judaken The Emperor (The French List) By Makenzy OrcelTranslated by Nathan Dize Prairie, Dresses, Art, Other By Danielle Dutton Follow @WUSTLnews Stay up to date on the latest news at WashU Publications Washington Magazine Newsroom Record Explore Bookshelf Video Gallery Connect Media Resources Contact Facebook Instagram ©2024 Washington University in St. Louis Go back to top

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